Archive for Columbia University – Page 48

New Student Photo Series 2011 – Post #15

The new student photo series continues to turn out great shots.  If you have sent photos, thank you and we will work on posting.  If  you have yet to send photos see this entry for details.

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Hi, my name is Nicolas Zaharya, from Argentina. I am an incoming student for the MPA-DP.

This is me, enjoying lake Nahuel-Huapi in Bariloche, an Argentina city by the Andes. The water is so clean and transparent but its also sooo cold!

Sun rise on the atlantic ocean in the city of Mar del Plata. They were building a new quay.

Children enjoying a new water conection in Lomas, a neighborhood on the suburbs of Buenos Aires, the most populated area in the country. They have been doing some impresive work extending water pipes for almost 1 million people.

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The following three shots were submitted by Debi Spindelman, an incoming MPA-DP student.

Shot with my 35mm fisheye camera in Ao Thong Nai Pan Yai on the island of Ko Phangan in the Gulf of Thailand. Longtail boats are a tourist photo staple, but the fisheye lens and some truly wild film helped capture the frenetic color of the islands in this region.

Shot with my D-SLR at Daraja Academy outside Nanyuki, Kenya. Last fall, I taught photography and creative writing to 52 young women of promise in Kenya’s first free all-girls secondary school. Part participatory research project and part creative project, I captured this shot of Form 1 students at an early-morning flag-raising ceremony as they shared a new song they had been learning. For images and words created by Daraja students through this project, check out www.OutsideTheLensatDaraja.blogspot.com.

Shot with my 35mm fisheye and waterproof housing at Pipes surf spot, Cardiff-by-the-Sea, CA. It’s easy to forget the glamour available domestically, and this was shot a few hundred yards from my house. I competed in surfing regularly for years, and am slowly selling off boards in anticipation of the surf-hiatus happening over the next two years.

New Student Photo Series 2011 – Post #14

The new student photo series continues again today.  If you have sent photos, thank you and we will work on posting.  If  you have yet to send photos see this entry for details.

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Hi, my name is Carly Roberts and I’m an incoming MPA student.

French Music Critic: I took this photo in Nice, France last summer. This little girl was fascinated by the street musicians; she alternated between looking quizzically at them and dancing to the music.

Tokyo Blur: This photo was taken in a busy train station in Tokyo, Japan. As I stood still for the long exposure, all the locals hurrying past looked at me like I was crazy!

Capital Funk: Most people are surprised when I tell them that I’m part of an award-winning hip hop dance crew! I’ve danced with Capital Funk in Washington DC for 6 years (you can look us up on youtube, we’re pretty awesome!)… that’s me to the right of center on the floor, in the yellow jacket.

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Anne Yalkabova, an incoming MIA student interested in International Security Policy, submitted the following pictures.

The photo is taken in Istanbul, Turkey. It is the ancient Basilica Cistern.

Below is the Sophia, Greek goddess of wisdom.  The photo was taken among ruins of ancient Ephesus, Turkey.

Journal of International Affairs Opportunities

The following is a message from the Journal of International Affairs.  For more information on the Journal you can also read this entry posted by a student earlier this year.

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Dear Incoming Students,

I would like to present you with an exciting opportunity to write for one of the nation’s oldest and most prestigious student-run academic publications in International Affairs.  Columbia University’s Journal of International Affairs is looking for book review writers for its Fall/Winter 2011 issue on authoritarian states.

The issue will explore common themes in the ways that different authoritarian states attempt to boost internal legitimacy, exploit open economic networks, leverage international institutions, co-opt the media and stifle dissent. By viewing these regimes from the inside out, this issue will yield important insights about the role that authoritarian governments play on the world stage.

By July 20, interested applicants should email [email protected] the following:

1. A recent CV

2. Two recommendations of potential books for review (recently published – earliest from 2009)

3. A short writing sample (no longer than 750 words)

Successful applicants will be notified of their acceptance by August 5. The books will be assigned after the recruiting process is over.

Each book review will be 300 words long and will be due on September 5, 2011.

New Student Photo Series 2011 – Post #13

Incoming MIA student Jesse Wolfe, who plans on studying International Security Policy, sent along the following text and photos.  Enjoy.

All three photos were taken in Arghandab District, Kandahar Province, Afghanistan.

Photo 1 (Polling Site): This was a former school being used as a polling site for the Afghan parliamentary elections in 2010. There were 12 men who showed up to cast a vote at this center on election day and 6 of those were paid election monitors.

Photo 2 (ANCOP 1): An Afghan National Civil Order Police (ANCOP) officer assisting with election security.

Photo 3 (Arghandab Malik): This is Hajji Baridad a prominent malik in a key district of Kandahar Province. He was assassinated by the Taliban recently because he had been working closely with the Afghan district governor and US forces to bring projects to his village. He had helped generate one of the first (and controversial) Afghan Local Police (ALP) forces in Arghandab with the support of US Special Forces.

New Student Photo Series 2011 – Post #12

Incoming MIA student Paul Hersh sent along the following photos for posting.  Enjoy.

“Vietnam – Ha Long Bay” – A lonely fisherman in Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.

“Syria – Aleppo – Umayyad Mosque” – Inside the Umayyad Mosque in Aleppo, Syria.

“Cambodia – Phnom Penh – Tuol Sleng” – Building A of Tuol Sleng, with large cells in which the bodies of the last victims were discovered. The photos on the wall are how the rooms were found, with the mutilated body of a prisoner chained to the bed, killed by his fleeing captors only hours before the prison was captured.  Tuol Sleng, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, was a former high school which was used as the notorious Security Prison 21 (S-21) by Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge regime from its rise to power in 1975 to its fall in 1979.

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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